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Culture and international marketing

Culture and international marketing. Questions:. 1 . How can culture affect marketing decisions for international subsidiaries of the amusement park? 2. What barriers and specifically cultural barriers can exist for Parc Astérix to enter foreign markets?

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Culture and international marketing

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  1. Culture and international marketing

  2. Questions: • 1. How can culture affect marketing decisions for international subsidiaries of the amusement park? • 2. What barriers and specifically cultural barriers can exist for Parc Astérix to enter foreign markets? • 3. In what cultural aspects or elements are Czechs different from your country? • 4. Can be these aspects used in marketing? If yes, which and how?

  3. Culture Defined • A continuously changing totality of learned and shared meanings, rituals, norms, and traditions among the members of an organization or society. • „Culture is the collective programming of the mind which distinguishes the members of one human group from another…Culture, in this sense, includes systems of values, and values are among the building blocks of culture…“ (G. Hofstede) • „…learned ways in which a society understands, decides and communicates“ (S. Hollensen) • Obvious source of difference!!! • Level of visibility and manageability of cultural differences – very different(language attitudes) • It is learned, shared and interrelated (various parts)

  4. Levels of culture The visible daily behaviour: e.g. body language, clothing, drinking and eating patterns, lifestyle Values and social morals: e.g. family values, sex roles, friendship patterns Basic cultural assumptions: e.g. religion, etnic culture, national identitiy

  5. Layers of culture National culture - cultural stereotypes Business/industry culture Company (organizational) culture Individual behaviour

  6. Culture and??? • Heaven is where the cooks are French, the mechanics are German, the policemen are English, the lovers are Italian, and it is all organized by the Swiss. Hell is where the policemen are German, the mechanics are French, the cooks are British, the lovers are Swiss, and its is all organized by the Italians • Source: Usunier “International Marketing”, Prentice-Hall, 1993, p.44

  7. Spoken/Written Language(information gathering and understanding, access to local society, intepretation of context) Differences in meaning in different countries which share the same language Dealing with multiple dialects High costs of translation High costs of translation blunders Nonverbal communication(in high-context cultures up to 90% of meaning) Proxemics Postures Orientations Chronemics Haptics Kinesics Paralinguistics Appearances + rules of negotiation, contract, material possessions, friendship patterns…) + ART (dance, music, pictures, statues…) Elements of Culture

  8. Elements of culture • Material culture and technology– houses, fashion, furniture, cars, gardens, streets, fields, production processes… • Social institutions – family, reference groups (primary and secondary), heroes, managers…) • Education (theory versus practice, learning versus learning by doing…)

  9. Elements of culture - comparisons & contrasts  North America Japan Myth / Hero Emphasis Group Individual Self-Denial Dependence Self-Expression Independence Attitude Emphasis Obligations Rights Style Cooperation Competition Assumptions Interdependence Independence Organization Man Individual With a Skill View of Self

  10. Consumer decisions are culturally influenced - husband and wife - equal roles? - what influence from children? - does one family member dominate in choice? Language and religion affects how markets communicate - grouping countries by language or religion? - grouping markets within a core language? - is religion a useful criterion for grouping? Culture and Decision-making

  11. High vs. Low Context CulturesEdward Hallhttp://edwardthall.com/ • Low-Context cultures: What is said is precisely what is meant • Messages are explicit • Words carry most of the information in communication • Switzerland, Germany, Scandinavia, United States • High-Context cultures: The context of the message— the message source, his or her standing in society or in the negotiating group, level of expertise, tone of voice, and body language—are all meaningful • Less information is contained in the verbal part of the message • More information resides in the context of communication (background, associations, basic values of communicators) • Japan, Saudi Arabia, Latin America, Italy and Spain MONOCHRONIC VS POLYCHRONIC CULTURES: Time is money“ USA, „Those who rush arrive first at the grave (Spain), „Before the time, it is not the time; after the time, it´s too late“ (France) PROXEMIC – DISTANCE, SPACE (in-group, outgroup, physical space…), e.g. friendship patterns, „size“ of family, guanxi „touch“ coulture – to show intimity in ads

  12. Advertising: Europe vs Saudi Arabia „touch culture“

  13. do one thing at a time concentrate on the job take time commitments seriously are committed to the job show respect for private property; rarely borrow or lend are accustomed to short-term relationships do many things at once are highly distractible consider time commitments casually are committed to people borrow and lend things often tend to build lifetime relationships Monochronic/Polychronic Cultures Monochronic PeoplePolychronic People

  14. Protestant Religion – stresses hard work and frugality Judaism– stresses education and development Islam– focus on rules for social interaction Hinduism– encourages family orientation and dictates strict dietary constraints Buddhism– stresses sufferance and avoidance of worldly desires How much dominant in macroenvironment (e.g. government) and microenvironment??? Business days Holidays Consumption patterns – alcohol, meat… Gender roles Gift giving Marketing practices Time Orientation Status Concern and Materialism Other – Marketing mix Religion

  15. Power Distance Uncertainty Avoidance Masculinity Versus Femininity Individualism Versus Collectivism Long-terms versus short term orientation Cultural Variability – CULTURAL DIMENSIONS (Geert Hofstede) http://www.geert-hofstede.com/

  16. Power-distance- differences in people accept or expect access to power; degree of inequality between people in social and physical terms • A high power-distance country, like Malaysia, displays customers and average citizens less prominently. Authority roles are enforced by such images as official certification logos. • A low power-distance country would emphasize equality among social and age groupings. • Uncertainty avoidance. Tolerance for ambiguity; degree to which people pefer formal rules and fixed patterns of life as means of enhancing security and how they pecieve risk taking. • High uncertainty-avoidance countries would respond better to a simple manner of navigation. • A low uncertainty-avoidance country would prefer a site with complex navigation with a multitude of link choices. • An example of a high uncertainty-avoidance country would be Belgium; a low uncertainty-avoidance country would be Singapore • Femininity vs. masculinity. gender roles, not physical characteristics. High-femininity countries blur the lines between gender roles, while high-masculinity countries display traditional role expectations. • Masculine values: achievement, money, successs and competition • feminine values: quality of life and environment • High-masculinity: Japan, Low-masculinity: Sweden.

  17. Collectivism vs. individualism. • Collectivism: people integrated into strong groups that protect them in exchange for unbridled loyalty. • Individualism: a person’s strong sense of self and that of his or her immediate blood relations. • A collectivist country would show groups of people in images, • Individualistic countries would most likely find site content and images with a single person accomplishing a challenge more appealing. The United States is an example of an individualistic country. Long-term vs. short-term orientation. Long-term emphasizes practice and practical value (mostly Asian markets). Short-term focus their content on truth and the certainty of beliefs (U:S:A and most of the European countries).

  18. Hofstede’s cultural dimensions – scores by countries http://www.geert-hofstede.com/marketing.shtml

  19. Advertising styles De Mooij, 2004

  20. Cultural values • Enduring beliefs about a specific mode of conduct or desirable end-state • Guide the selection or evaluation of behavior • Are ordered by importance in relation to one another to form a system of value priorities • Enculturation Process by which individuals learn the beliefs and behaviors endorsed by one’s own culture • Acculturation Learning a new culture • Assimilation Maintenance of the new culture, and resistance to new cultures and to one’s old culture http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XHioryoMes&feature=related Doing business in China

  21. Norms are derived from values and defined as rules that dictate what is right or wrong, acceptable or unacceptable Imperative What an outsider must or must not do Exclusive What locals may do but an outsider cannot Adiaphora What an outsider may or may not do Cultural norms http://www.asianoffbeat.com/default.asp?Display=942 -CHINESE VS GERMAN CULTURE http://dahl.at/wordpress/research/intercultural-communication/ http://www.slideshare.net/ibahrine/ibahrine-chapter-3-value-culture

  22. PERCEPTION OF EACH OTHER´S CULTURE WHAT IS TRENDY OPINION WAY OF LIFE PUNCTUALITY CONTACTS

  23. AT RESTAURANT STOMACH ACHE ANGER/DISPLEASURE QUES PARTIES VIEW OF MYSELF

  24. SUNDAY ON STREETS TRANSPORTATION HANDLING PROBLEMS DAILY MEALS TRAVELLING DEFINITION OF BEAUTY

  25. NEW THINGS THE CHILD MOODS AND WEATHER THE BOSS SHOWER TIME LIFE OF ELDERLY

  26. http://wps.pearsoned.co.uk/ema_uk_he_hollensen_globalmark_4/64/16424/4204693.cw/index.htmlhttp://wps.pearsoned.co.uk/ema_uk_he_hollensen_globalmark_4/64/16424/4204693.cw/index.html

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